a 
80 HYALINIA NITIDULA. 
SPAIN AND®PORTUGAL. 
Spain—The var. nitens is reported from Catalonia, Aragon, Navarre, Old 
Castile, and the Island of Majorca. The var. swbhnitens from Navarre and the 
Basque Provinces. 
Portugal—Morelet records the species as common at Cintra in Estremadura, 
and as occurring in the north in a strongly-coloured form. Signor Nobre reports 
it from Serra de Arrabida. The var. nitens is reported from Beira and Minho. 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Recorded as found in Austria, Bohemia, Carinthia, Croatia, Dalmatia, Galicia, 
Goritz, Hungary, Moravia, Transylvania, and the Tyrol. The var. nitens has been 
noted for Nemila in Central Bosnia. The var. hiulca in Styria. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway—Apparently restricted to the southern part, and has been recorded from 
the districts of Trondhjem, Bergen, Christiansand and Christiania. The var. nitens 
is found in Christiania. 
Sweden—Restricted to the south, and recorded for many places in the provinces 
of Skane, Blekinge, Smaland, and Svealand, as well as from the Islands of Oeland 
and Gothland. The var. nifens is confined to Stockholm and the extreme south of 
the province of Gothland. 
Denmark—Very common everywhere throughout the country. Abundant at 
Alling in Jutland, and on the Islands of Zealand and Bornholm. The var. nitens 
is found at Sveiboek in Jutland, and in the beech woods of Zealand and Bornholm. 
RUSSIA. 
Apparently distributed throughout European Russia, being recorded from the 
provinces of Archangel, Courland, Crimea, Kharkov, Kiev, Kovno, Livland, 
Poland, St. Petersburg, Volhynia, and the territory of Kuban, in Caucasia ; by 
Schlesch from South-west Finland (Hango!) and the Islands of Oesel and Dagé off 
the coast of Esthland. The sub-var. minor of the var. nitens is recorded from Kursk. 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
United States—Gardens, Oakland, California, G. H. Clapp, Nov. 1902. 
Canada—Recorded from Fort Resolution, on Great Slave Lake, North-west 
Territory, by Kennicott (W. H. Dall, Moll. Alaska, 1905, p. 39). 
Fic. 118,—Lane, Marske near Redcar, a habitat of Hyadinia nitidula sub-var. helmii (from 
a photograph by Mr, Baker Hudson). 
